Modeling the role of dislocation substructure during class M and exponential creep
Abstract
The different substructures that form in the power-law and exponential creep regimes for single phase crystalline materials under various conditions of stress, temperature, and strain are reviewed. The microstructure is correlated both qualitatively and quantitatively with power-law and exponential creep as well as with steady state and non-steady state deformation behavior. These observations suggest that creep is influenced by a complex interaction between several elements of the microstructure, such as dislocations, cells, and subgrains. The stability of the creep substructure is examined in both of these creep regimes during stress and temperature change experiments. these observations are rationalized on the basis of a phenomenological model, where normal primary creep is interpreted as a series of constant structure exponential creep rate-stress relationships. The implications of this viewpoint on the magnitude of the stress exponent and steady-state behavior are discussed. A theory is developed to predict the macroscopic creep behavior of a single phase material using quantitative microstructural data. In this technique the thermally activated deformation mechanisms proposed by dislocation physics are interlinked with a previously developed multiphase, three-dimensional, dislocation substructure creep model. This procedure leads to several coupled differential equations interrelating macroscopic creep plasticity with microstructural evolution.
- Publication:
-
NASA STI/Recon Technical Report N
- Pub Date:
- August 1995
- Bibcode:
- 1995STIN...9617816R
- Keywords:
-
- Creep Properties;
- Crystal Dislocations;
- Microstructure;
- Single Crystals;
- Stress-Strain Relationships;
- Substructures;
- Tensile Creep;
- Tensile Deformation;
- Axial Loads;
- Differential Equations;
- Phenomenology;
- Plastic Properties;
- Steady State;
- Three Dimensional Models;
- Structural Mechanics